You know the drill. A new county hits your radar and you start pulling employment levels, growth rates, industry mix, then try to line it up against a national view. By the time you are done, you have a pile of tabs and a chart that still needs context. The friction is not the data. It is the stitching. This task cuts that step and gives you a clean read on how a county stacks up without another round of pulls. Research ~5 min to run Generate County Employment Report Vic prompt Use Vic to generate an employment report for Travis County, Texas. Purpose Replaces 90 minutes of manual data collection and formatting with a 5-minute output that places any county in national context for faster location and investment decisions. Inputs Request Required Output Format Optional Outputs A complete labor-market report delivered in chat or as a Word file. Single counties receive a full dashboard with top growing and declining industries; screens return ranked tables; comparisons return side-by-side views, all benchmarked to national percentiles. Time saved Replaces about 90 minutes of manual data collection and formatting with a ~5 minute output. How it works You hand Vic a simple request, either a single county, a list for a screen, or a head to head comparison. The run line is direct: Use Vic to generate an employment report for Travis County, Texas. You can also ask for a Word file instead of chat. Vic builds a county level labor market report around four things that matter in practice. Employment levels to anchor size. Growth momentum to show direction. Economic resilience to see how the market holds up. Demand signals by property type so you can connect jobs to space. Each metric is set against national percentiles. That matters more than another raw growth number. A county growing at 2 percent means one thing if it sits in the 80th percentile and another if it sits in the 40th. You get the relative position without opening a second dataset. The output adapts to the request. For a single county, you get a full dashboard view with the basics plus a cut of top growing and declining industries. That is usually where the story is, and it is often where manual work drags. For multi county screens, Vic returns ranked tables so you can see which markets rise to the top on momentum or resilience. For comparisons, you get side by side views with the same metrics aligned, which removes the common problem of mismatched definitions. The report comes back in chat or as a formatted Word document. The writing follows CRE style, numbers are clean, and the structure is ready for an IC memo or a broker note. No extra pass to make it presentable. A small but important point: the task keeps the scope tight to labor and demand signals. It does not try to be a full market report. That focus is why it runs in about five minutes and still replaces a much longer manual process. You can layer in rents, supply, or capital markets after you have a clear read on the labor base. If you screen markets or need a quick, defensible snapshot for a meeting, this is the fastest way to get there. The national percentile framing cuts through noise, and the side by side formats make comparisons less error prone.